Skip to Content
Godfather Noir Gilded Stiletto Switchblade - Black Marble

Price:

10.87


Raptor Talon Hawkbill Italian Stiletto Switchblade - White
Raptor Talon Hawkbill Italian Stiletto Switchblade - White
12.95 12.95
Godfather Elegance Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Wood & Gold
Godfather Elegance Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Wood & Gold
10.87 10.87

Velvet Night Gilded Stiletto Automatic Knife - Black Marble

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/1796/image_1920?unique=3dfe9ef

11 sold in last 24 hours

This is a classic Italian-style automatic knife for sale built for the buyer who cares how an action feels. Push-button deployment snaps the gold spear point into lockup, backed by a positive sliding safety. The black marble handle isn’t just dressy; it gives a solid, slim purchase in hand. Long, narrow, and unapologetically stiletto in profile, it’s a display-ready automatic that still begs to be fired. If you appreciate clean mechanics wrapped in tuxedo trim, this one earns a spot in the tray.

10.87 10.87 USD 10.87

GF6GB

Not Available For Sale

4 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Automatic Knife for Sale with Classic Italian Stiletto Bones

Strip away the gold and marble for a second and look at the lines. This is a traditional Italian-style automatic knife for sale: long, narrow spear point blade, flared bolsters, and that unmistakable stiletto profile that’s been riding in jackets and boots since before most catalogs knew the word "tactical." The difference here is how it’s executed—modern push-button automatic action, a real safety, and enough visual drama to hold its own in a velvet-lined display.

If you’re here to buy automatic knife designs that actually respect the mechanics, this one gets the fundamentals right: controlled spring tension, clean button travel, and a lockup that feels more reassuring than its price would ever suggest.

Why This Gold Stiletto Automatic Knife Deserves a Spot in Your Collection

Automatic knives for sale are everywhere. Automatic knives worth buying are not. This piece leans into its heritage: an Italian-inspired stiletto switchblade profile with a modern automatic mechanism underneath. The gold spear point blade runs just under four inches, giving you that classic reach without wandering into absurd display-only territory. The handle hits the sweet spot at five inches closed, which means it fills the hand without feeling clumsy.

The visual language is pure dress knife—glossy gold hardware and a black marble-pattern handle—but mechanically it’s a straightforward side-opening automatic with a coil or leaf-driven spring, tuned for a confident snap instead of a brutal kick. That matters. Too much spring and you’re fighting the knife. Too little and you’re left with a sluggish deployment. This one lands in that satisfying middle ground: decisive deployment, no drama.

Mechanics That Earn an Enthusiast’s Respect

Let’s talk action, because that’s why you buy an automatic knife, not just any pocket blade. This is a side-opening automatic, not an OTF. You’re working with a push-button release that does two jobs: it fires the blade and also acts as the release when you close it. That button travel and the way the spring comes online are where cheap autos fall apart. Here, the throw is short and positive—press, feel the break, then the blade rides the spring into full lock with a clean, audible snap.

Push-Button Action and Safety You Can Actually Feel

The round push-button on the handle side sits proud enough to find without hunting, but not so exposed that it’s begging to fire in your pocket. The sliding safety is the adult in the room. Slide it on, and the button is blocked—no accidental deployments when you’re fishing it out of a bag or drawer. Slide it off, and the action is ready. Serious automatic buyers know: a real safety on a side-opening switchblade isn’t optional; it’s part of responsible carry.

Blade, Profile, and Real-World Use

The spear point blade gives you symmetric lines with enough tip to pierce and enough belly to slice. You’re looking at a plain edge, glossy gold-finished steel—easy to maintain, easy to touch up. Is this a pure work knife? No. It’s a dress auto with usable geometry. Think jacket carry, collection rotation, or the knife you hand a fellow enthusiast when they ask what else you’ve got besides the usual tactical suspects.

Buying an Automatic Knife for Sale: Style, Balance, and Carry Reality

On paper, an 8.875-inch overall automatic might sound big. In hand, this stiletto profile carries lighter than its dimensions suggest. The black marble-pattern handle scales are slim, pinned to the frame, and shaped to keep that classic straight-line aesthetic while still giving your fingers something to index on. There’s no pocket clip, and that’s not a flaw; it’s a choice. This is jacket pocket, inner coat, or case carry—old-school style, the way stilettos were meant to ride.

For the collector who likes to buy automatic knife designs that photograph well and still give a satisfying deployment, this checks the boxes: dramatic contrast between black and gold, symmetrical silhouette, and a button-and-safety layout that shows nicely when the knife is closed on a tray.

Legal Context Before You Buy an Automatic Knife

Any time you see an automatic knife for sale—especially something with obvious switchblade heritage—you should be thinking about the law before you think about deployment. In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mainly regulates interstate commerce and shipment of automatic knives, especially across state lines and through the mail. It does not automatically ban you from owning one, but it does shape how and where they can be shipped and sold.

Where things really tighten up is at the state and local level. Some states allow automatic and switchblade carry with minimal restrictions, some allow ownership but restrict carry, and some heavily limit or ban them outright. This piece is a side-opening automatic, not an OTF, but most jurisdictions group them together under the same legal heading. Translation: before you drop this into a pocket, check your state and city laws and understand whether an automatic knife is legal to carry where you live and how blade length factors into that.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Legality is a patchwork. At the federal level in the U.S., automatic knives (including traditional switchblades and many OTF designs) are regulated under the Switchblade Knife Act, which restricts interstate shipment and commercial movement but doesn’t outright criminalize simple possession for most civilians. The real decisions happen at the state and local level. Some states treat an automatic knife like any other folding knife; others draw hard lines on blade length, carry method, or outright bans. Before you buy automatic knife models like this stiletto, verify your state and local statutes, pay attention to terms like "switchblade," "automatic," or "gravity knife," and when in doubt, consult a current legal resource or attorney. This information is not legal advice, just the framework you should be thinking within.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any folding knife that uses a spring to open the blade when you activate a button, lever, or similar control—the key is that the blade deploys under spring power, not manual pressure along the full arc. A switchblade is the traditional term for this same class, especially classic side-opening designs like Italian stilettos. OTF—"out the front"—is a specific subset of automatic knives where the blade travels linearly out the end of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. This knife is a side-opening automatic in a switchblade-style stiletto pattern, not an OTF. That distinction matters to collectors and, in some places, to the law.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Three things: profile, action, and presence. The profile is a textbook Italian-inspired stiletto with a real spear point, which instantly reads "classic" to anyone who knows the genre. The action is a modern push-button automatic with a genuine sliding safety, tuned for a clean, confident snap instead of a violent, knife-abusing slam. And the presence—the gold blade, gold bolsters, and black marble-pattern scales—puts it squarely in dress-auto territory, the kind of piece that looks right in a case next to customs and still begs to be fired now and then. For the price of an impulse buy, you’re getting a switchblade-style automatic that actually respects the lineage.

For the Enthusiast Who Buys Automatic Knives with Intention

If you collect on feel and sound, not just brand names, this is the kind of automatic knife for sale that earns a slot. It’s not pretending to be a hard-use field tool; it’s a gold-and-black stiletto with honest mechanics, a real safety, and the kind of silhouette that made you fall in love with switchblades in the first place. Add it to the tray, fire it a few dozen times, and it will explain itself.

Blade Length (inches) 3.875
Overall Length (inches) 8.875
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Gold
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Marble
Button Type Push Button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety Switch
Pocket Clip No